Keywords

Introduction

Over 50% of patients diagnosed for primary colorectal carcinoma develop liver metastases. Partial liver resection is the single effective treatment improving dismal survival [1]. Since few patients, however, are candidates for resection, development of therapies that prevent formation of liver metastases is warranted.

Outgrowth of metastases may be reduced or prevented by the action of tumour specific T cells, which are activated in T cell areas of lymph nodes by professional antigen presenting cells (APC). Dendritic cells (DC) are the most potent APC, capable of providing the necessary co-stimulatory signals [2]. DC have been derived in vitro from blood monocytes (moDC) for use in clinical trials to generate tumour specific immune responses, and results of vaccination studies in melanoma patients are encouraging [3, 4]. However, vaccination for various other cancer types and treatment of established metastases with antigen-pulsed DC has been disappointing.

In the present study we investigated whether vaccination of rats with tumour antigen-pulsed moDC could prevent outgrowth of experimental liver metastases originating from colorectal cancer. Additionally, the therapeutic effect of moDC on existing micrometastases was evaluated.

Methods

Animals

Male Wag/Rij rats (Charles-River, Maastricht, The Netherlands) weighing 180–220 g were used in all experiments.

To generate tumour antigen-pulsed moDC (moDC+), a mixture of necrotic and apoptotic CC531 tumour cells was added to moDC- (1:1) at the last day of the 7-day culture. To generate this antigen mixture, CC531 tumour cells were treated with UV-B light, cultured for 24 hours and subsequently subjected to 3 cycles of freezing and thawing.

Induction of Liver Metastases

Rats underwent small laparotomy under general anaesthesia and a loop of the small intestine was exposed. Under microscopic vision, 1 – 106 live CC531 tumour cells in 0.5 ml of PBS were inoculated into the mesenteric vein, followed by ligation of the vein, as described earlier [6].

Vaccination and Treatment Protocol

Rats were immunised subcutaneously with PBS, tumour antigens from 35 – 104 necrotic CC531 cells, 35 – 104 moDC- or 35 – 104 moDC+. In the vaccination protocol, rats were immunised 14 days before inoculation of CC531 cells. Forty days later, rats were sacrificed. In the treatment protocol, rats were inoculated with CC531 tumour cells and immunised 3 days later, when micrometastases had already developed [7]. Rats were sacrificed after an additional 21 days.

Number of tumour nodules was counted macroscopically. Differences were tested using the nonparametric ANOVA with Kruskal-Wallis post-test. Significance was accepted at P &lt; 0.05. Results are expressed as mean – SEM.

Surprisingly, vaccination with moDC- also induced a reduction in tumour outgrowth compared to PBS (P &lt; 0.05). This could have been caused by in vivo generation of bystander T cells directed against foreign FCS components, because CC531 cells, moDC- and moDC+ were all cultured in medium containing FCS. Subsequent recognition of FCS components on CC531 cells might have initiated tumour cytotoxicity. To exclude bystander effects in future vaccination experiments, CC531 cells should be cultured in syngeneic Wag/Rij serum.

None of the four treatment protocols reduced outgrowth of micrometastases (PBS: 1.4 – 0.2, n = 5; CC531 antigens: 2.8 – 1.2, n = 6; moDC-: 1.8 – 0.4, n = 6; moDC+: 5.2 – 2.1, n = 5). This could be due to the fact that in vivo generation of specific T cells after DC vaccination takes several weeks, during which time tumour cells have the opportunity to spread. Additionally, tumour cells have the capacity to suppress immune responses by production of IL-6 [9] and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) [10]. In accordance with our earlier data, it might be valuable to administer adjuvants such as GM-CSF to enhance DC functionality [6].

Our results indicate that tumour antigen-pulsed DC vaccination may be valuable in the prevention of liver metastases formation in primary colorectal carcinoma. However, when micrometastases are already present, DC immunisation seems less effective. Characterisation of effector cells and optimisation of immunisation is therefore essential in future studies.

Mels AK, Beelen RHJ, Meijer S: Clinical use of GM-CSF in the prevention of liver metastases; a pilot study in the rat on the effect of rmGM-CSF on Kupffer cells. In: Cells of the hepatic sinusoid. 1998, September 27 – October 1. Christchurch, New Zealand. The Kupffer Cell FoundationGoogle Scholar

Copyright

This article is published under license to BioMed Central Ltd. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.